Abstract

As the most promising lead-free piezoelectric ceramics to replace lead zirconate titanate (PZT) ceramics, potassium sodium niobate (KNN) ceramics have been widely studied for their application prospects in various electronic devices. Increasing Qm while maintaining a high piezoelectric activity is quite important for piezoelectric ceramics applied in ultrasonic devices. A KNN-based ceramic with high d33 and Qm is prepared by a conventional solid-state technique to construct polycrystalline phase boundaries and induce defect dipoles. The best overall performance can reach d33 = 260 pC/N, Qm = 210, and TC = 293 °C. The temperature dependence of the relevant parameters is tested, where Qm increases but d33 decreases with the rise of temperature accompanied by escaping ferroelectric boundary, which shows that the polarization rotation plays an important role in the two parameters. The hardening effect of KNN-based ceramics with CuO doping is further studied by first-principles calculations, demonstrating that the Cu doping strongly disturbs the ferroelectric order, but the formation of defect dipoles could stabilize the ferroelectric order. It is illustrated that defect dipoles always find their ground state at the site near the domain walls and the oriented defect dipoles hinder the polarization rotation severely, confirming the role of the defect dipoles in KNN-based materials.

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